I've been meaning to share that in the Tiki Films thread for a number of months now. It has some elements that would become elements of Tiki, stylized tiki idols and a blending of Oceanic cultures from Polynesia to PNG. Pal was Tiki before Tiki was even Tiki.

The cannibal dance sequence from "Hoola Boola" was trimmed and made another appearance in the end half of "The Little Broadcast" (1943) as a production number on a theater stage that it couldn't possibly have fit on, similar to big budget Hollywood musicals. I'm sure it was done for the sake of economy measures, it being wartime and all.

Pal also made a previous Puppetoon with a Polynesian theme in 1938 called "South Sea Sweethearts" of which I have only seen tiny low-res screen captures or a portion of the footage that has been dubbed over in this music video.

There is also a Pal Studios made promotional ad for Peter Paul Mounds candy bars called "Sweet Pacific" that has a South Seas theme.

On 2013-06-05 20:53, Bay Park Buzzy wrote:Before John-O names off a bunch of 1940's crap we'll never get around to watching, I cast my vote for:

Bikini A Go Go!

great film bay park buzzy. best viewed with the 'hooter horn' on so you know when not to miss the action.

side note: this film was also known as curse of the erotic tiki and features the ultra-flaming hot 90s goddess nikki fritz as a dominatrix and jay richardson as the scientist who keeps popping up to tell you how the film affects your health.

Welllll....they ARE really cool, and ahead of their time. But the genre of a puppet movie kind of makes it unlikely that the primitive idols portrayed in it are rendered in any other style than cartoony.

Very true, puppetoons were intentually humorous entertainment, even when tinged with political commentary as in "Tulips Shall Grow" (1943). Those "whimsical inauthentic depictions of tikis" are designed that way for comic porpoises.

The tikis in "Hoola Boola," and the way the island cultures were portrayed, mirrors what the live action film industry had beeen doing for decades. Making stuff up, be it the physical set dressing, props, costumes, language, or the portrayal of the cultures customs and behaviors. A real artifact, design, words, clothing, or real life activities may occasionally find their way into some films, but mostly these things were just used as inspiration for the phony culture being presented. As Sven has oft times pointed out, this was the foundation upon which Tiki was built.

A good contemporary to "Hoola Boola" example is "Pardon My Sarong" (1942). Fake native culture complete with stylized idols and various other items that are great examples of cross cultural tiki confusion.

Native weapons and shields, skulls upon a stone altar with what looks like a stylized depiction of a Rapa Nui birdman head perched atop a moai style body with hands on belly.

Lou Costello climbing the path up a volcano to the temple with stone face, past a column of rock with various other stone faces, some appearing Asian, others similar to moai. I feel the inspiration was such places as Ta Prohm.

Inside the temple Costello is chased by the villain's henchmen up a stone altar reminicent of a Mesoamerican pyramid, complete with carved stone faces, what look like a cross between Mayan hieroglyphs and tapa designs, a large predatory cat head (yeah I know, but Hollywood has always had wild animals that don't belong where the movie takes place, be it tigers in Africa, or penguins in the Arctic), plus more shields, weapons, and clothing that look more African than Oceanic.

A closer shot of Lou scrambbling up the side of the pyramid and a better look at the face on the side and the carved designs.

Lou eventually runs/jumps out a side doorway into thin air past another stone face that, although the features could appear Polynesian with a different headdress, etc., it leans more toward Mesoamerican in this shot (don't worry, Lou luckily lands in the dead tree protruding from the cliff face).

Mayan stone bas relief carving and Olmec heads.

Another contemporary example of borrowing from different cultures, blending things together and wholesale fabrication of native life is the wedding feast sequence in "Road to Singapore" (1940). No tiki idols, but hula is borrowed from, plus Hope and Crosby utilize gibberish when conversing with each other AND the natives.

Thankfully, unlike the makers of "Road to Singapore" and "Pardon My Sarong," Pal kept the style close enough that we can see the idols in "Hoola Boola" were inspired by Oceanic cultures. Very similar to what would eventually become the practice of Tiki artists, designers and decorators, but the tikis in "Hoola Boola" were styled as they were for comedic effect, not to fabricate an imaginary idylic paradise to escape to.